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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Arteriolar diameters and venular erythrocyte velocities in the small pial vessels on the surface of the cat brain were measured by TV methods during induced epileptic
seizures
through a cranial window. Grand mal
seizures
maximally dilated arterioles and increased venular erythrocyte velocity up to 400%. High positive correlation existed between changes in CSF hydrogen ion concentration and pial arteriolar diameter, suggesting metabolic regulation of CBF through CSF/interstitial fluid hydrogen ion alterations during the
seizure
.
Stroke
PMID:Brain microvascular hemodynamic responses to induced seizures. 0 70
A new model of transient, bilateral hemispheric ischemia in the unanesthetized rat is described. During ether anesthesia the rat's vertebral arteries were electrocauterized through the alar foramina of the first cervical vertebra and reversible clasps placed loosely around the common carotid arteries. Twenty-four hr later, the awake rats were restrained and the carotid clasps tightened to produce 4-vessel occlusion. The carotid clasps were removed after 10, 20 or 30 min of 4-vessel occlusion and the animals killed by perfusion fixation 72 hr later. Rats which convulsed during the ischemic or post-ischemic period were excluded from further study. All rats subjected to 20 or 30 min of 4-vessel occlusion demonstrated ischemic neuronal damage. The H1 and paramedian hippocampus, striatum and layers 3, 5 and 6 of the posterior neocortex were the regions most frequently damaged. The advantages of this model are the ease of preparation of large numbers of animals, a high rate of predictable ischemic neuronal damage, a low incidence of
seizures
and the absence of anesthesia.
Stroke
PMID:A new model of bilateral hemispheric ischemia in the unanesthetized rat. 3 14
Embolism of the right middle cerebral artery regularly failed to induce clinical or electrical
seizure
activity during acute ischemia in primates. This negative correlation casts some doubt on the popular interpretation of
seizures
at the outset of clinical
stroke
as evidence of cerebral embolism.
...
PMID:Laboratory note. EEG changes after acute cerebral embolism. 5 70
Both naturally occurring disease processes and experimental models of human disease in the Mongolian gerbil were reviewed. The gerbil was highly susceptible to cerebral infarction following unilateral ligation of one common carotid artery and was useful in studies of the pathogenesis of
stroke
. Spontaneous epileptiform
seizures
mimicked those of human idiopathic epilepsy, and both
seizure
-sensitive and resistant strains have been bred. Perhaps because of its more efficient nephron, the gerbil accumulated four to six times as much renal lead as the rat, and the gerbil has been proposed as an experimental model of lead nephropathy. On standard diets, about 10% of the animals became obese, and some showed decreased glucose tolerance, elevated serum immunoreactive insulin and diabetic changes in the pancreas and other organs. Some breeders exhibited hyperactivity of the adrenal cortex associated with hyperglycemia, hyperlipidemia and degenerative vascular disease. Although dietary supplements of cholesterol were toxic and did not induce atherosclerosis, the gerbil was useful in other studies of cholesterol absorption and metabolism. Spontaneous, insidious periodontal disease became evident after about 6 months on standard diets, and dental caries were induced by cariogenic diets or by pathodontic streptococci. Spontaneous neoplasia occurred in 8.4--24% of gerbils, usually after 2 years of life. Adrenal cortical, ovarian and cutaneous tumors were the most consistently reported neoplasms.
...
PMID:The pathology of the Mongolian Gerbil (Meriones unguiculatus): a review. 9 95
Cavernous hemangioma of the retina is an unusual vascular hamartoma whose coexistence with vascular anomalies of the skin and central nervous system has been recognized recently. A 39-year-old woman, who had an acute palsy of the right third cranial nerve, had a history of
seizures
, cutaneous vascular anomalies, and a cavernous hemangioma of the retina of the right eye. One of her daughters demonstrated bilateral retinal cavernous hemangiomas, and another daughter, who developed
seizures
when febrile, displayed cutaneous vascular anomalies. A four-generation pedigree showed a number of cutaneous vascular anomalies,
seizures
, and
stroke
-related deaths. The pedigree suggests further support for considering this disorder an authentic oculoneurocutaneous triad.
...
PMID:Cavernous hemangioma of the retina. A four-generation pedigree with neurocutaneous manifestations and an example of bilateral retinal involvement. 22 14
In 1973 345 patients were admitted to Turku City Hospital because of
cerebrovascular accident
, 21 of them having epilepsy as a sequel after an earlier
stroke
or developing epileptic
seizures
during an observation period of 4 years. In the same year 27 patients were admitted because of epilepsy, 11 of them showing onset of
seizures
after an earlier
stroke
. Thus 32 patients, or 9,0 per cent of 356 cases with CVD proved to have epilepsy. The incidence of epilepsy did not depend on the nature of the vascular lesion. In three quarters of the cases the onset occurred within two years after the initial
stroke
. Most patients had generalized
seizures
, quite a few only convulsions with focal origin or psychomotor attacks. EEGs showed features of epileptic nature in half of the cases, although mostly slight. The importance of diagnosing epilepsy after a
cerebrovascular accident
is emphasized because recurrences of
seizures
can be successfully prevented with anticonvulsant therapy. Deepening of the paralytic signs after
seizure
is often misdiagnosed as a relapse of the
stroke
itself.
...
PMID:Epilepsy as a sequel to cerebrovascular accident. 29 95
Dantrolene sodium or dantrolene1 is 1([5-(nitrophenyl)furfurylidend] amino) hydantoin sodium hydrate. It is indicated for use in chronic disorders characterised by skeletal muscle spasticity, such as spinal cord injury,
stroke
, cerebral palsy and multiple sclerosis. Dantrolene is believed to act directly on the contractile mechanism of skeletal muscle to decrease the force of contraction in the absence of any demonstrated effects on neural pathways, on the neuromuscular junction, or on the excitable properties of the muscle fibre membranes. Controlled trials have demonstrated that dantrolene is superior to placebo in adults or children with spasticity from various causes, as evidenced by clinical assessments of disability and daily activities, and by muscle and reflex responses to mechanical and electrical stimulation. It is somewhat less effective in patients with multiple sclerosis than in those with spasticity from other causes. There has been a general clinical impression in controlled trials that dantrolene caused less sedation than would have been expected from therapeutically comparable doses of diazepam. In 2 controlled trials, there was no significant difference between dantrolene and diazepam in terms of reductions in spasticity, clonus, and hyperreflexia, but side-effects such as drowsiness and inco-ordination occurred significantly more frequently on diazepam. Long-term studies have indicated continuing benefit for patients taking dantrolene, though the incidence of side-effects has often been high and there has been a suggestion of exacerbation of
seizures
in children with cerebral palsy. Dantrolene may be of value in the medical treatment of spasm of the external urethral sphincter due to neurological and non-neurological disease, and animal studies suggest a potential use in the management of malignant hyperpyrexia. Chemical evidence of liver dysfunction may occur in 0.7 to 1% of patients on long-term treatment with dantrolene, with symptomatic hepatitis in 0.35 to 0.5% and fatal hepatitis in 0.1 to 0.2%. The drug commonly causes transient drowsiness, dizziness, weakness, general malaise, fatigue and diarrhoea at the start of therapy. Muscle weakness may be the principal limiting side-effect in ambulant patients, particularly in those with multiple sclerosis, and therapy could be hazardous in patients with pre-existing bulbar or respiratory weakness. The dosage of dantrolene has been fixed in most controlled trials, though long-term studies have indicated the need for individualisation of dosage. The initial dose is usually 25mg once daily, increasing to 25mg two, three or four times daily, and then by increments of 25mg up to as high as 100mg two, three or four times daily. The lowest dose compatible with optimal response is recommended.
...
PMID:Dantrolene sodium: a review of its pharmacological properties and therapeutic efficacy in spasticity. 31 89
Unilateral (50 to 118 minutes) and bilateral (2 to 33 minutes) carotid artery occlusion in gerbils resulted in two distinct types of neuronal alteration: ischemic cell change (ICC) in selectively vulnerable brain regions, and selective chromatolysis (SC) confined to the deeper layers of the cortex, the Sommer sector of zone h-1, and the paramedian region (PM) of the hippocampus. In typical SC the nucleus was eccentric and the Nissl substance was lost in the central eosinophilic cytoplasm. In electron micrographs this area of cytoplasm showed disruption of smooth and rough endoplasmic reticulum with disaggregation of polyribosomes and accumulation of mitochrondria and various dense bodies. SC was identified at 2 to 3 hours and was still recognizable at five days. When bilateral carotid artery occlusion lasted 5 to 6 minutes, SC was seen in the hippocampal Sommer sector and cerebral cortex, while ICC was restricted to the endfolium (h3-5). Unlike ICC, the frequency of SC was not related to the duration of ischemia but probably to the epileptic
seizures
(overt and subclinical) initiated by ischemia in the gerbil. These changes must be considered when the gerbil is employed as a model of experimental
stroke
.
...
PMID:Selective chromatolysis of neurons in the gerbil brain: a possible consequence of "epileptic" activity produced by common carotid artery occlusion. 42 76
An exploratory case-control study was conducted in 15 hospitals in the Baltimore, MD, SMSA of possible etiologic factors associated with brain tumors in children. Eighty-four children with brain tumors were compared to normal children and to children with other malignancies. Parents of these children were interviewed about a variety of possible etiologic factors. The findings included: 1) children with brain tumors as well as children with other cancers had a greater tendency than normal children to have been first births and to have had higher birth weights; 2) more children with brain tumors had a sibling with epilepsy or
seizures
than did normal children, and several of the mothers of children with brain tumors had themselves had epilepsy or a
stroke
at a relatively young age; 3) there were no significant differences between the groups with regard to several maternal characteristics, including smoking during pregnancy and prior radiation exposure; 4) more children with brain tumors and children with other cancers were found to have had exposures to insecticides than had normal children; 5) fewer children with brain tumors or with other cancers were reported to have had tonsillectomies than normal children; and 6) more of the children with brain tumors as well as the children with other malignancies were reported to have been exposed to farm animals and to sick pets. This exploratory study is one of the first case-control studies of the epidemiology of brain tumors in children, and the results suggest directions for future epidemiologic studies in this relatively uncharted field.
...
PMID:Risk factors for brain tumors in children. 45 68
A synthetic procedure for the preparation of imidazolidinediones by the base-catalyzed cyclization of propargylureas is described. This method appears to be the most versatile way of obtaining these compounds containing tertiary groups substituted on ring-nitrogen number 3. One of these derivatives, 3-tert-butyl-5,5-dimethyl-2,4-imidazolidinedione (1a), has shown a moderate level of subcutaneous metrazole
seizure
threshold activity (scMet indicates potential for control of petit mal epileptic
seizures
) in control screens on mice, as determined by the National Institute of Neurological and Communicative Disorders and
Stroke
.
...
PMID:Synthesis of imidazolidinediones and oxazolidinediones from cyclization of propargylureas and propargyl carbamates. 45 26
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